Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Hi all!Because I’ve
been trying to get out some other projects, I haven’t come up with anything new
and special to demonstrate at this Sunday’s workshop.So, we will start with the Round Robin
Tarot—as there really is more to explore with this technique.Then, I will demonstrate the Spinning Basket
Fortune Teller.Also, for those who are
planning to come: if you have any questions on your mind that you would like to
put to the tarot and other oracle decks, and you don’t mind bringing them up in
this public format, we can do different types of readings to address your
questions.

Saturday, September 10, 2011

So, we have been considering how to approach major tarot
figures as teachers, based on a reading exercise utilizing the Wizards Tarot,
and in the previous post, I cited a reading that got The Hierophant as master
teacher.(The other flanking cards in
this reading were the Four of Pentacles and The Magician, and the Hidden
Teacher card was The Wheel of Fortune—I will get around to these in a bit.)

To continue with the example, in the Wizards Tarot, the
Hierophant is represented as the centaur Chiron as master teacher, and he
functions as professor of mythology in the “Mandrake Academy,”
the magical school around which this deck is structured.Because Corinne Kenner designed this deck
with Golden Dawn correspondences in mind, the Hierophant is conceptually paired
with Taurus.I believe the person who
got this as her teacher card is a Taurus, but I wasn’t focused in on the
astrological aspects when this card was drawn, and so failed to mention
that.Otherwise, this would have been
one of those “Aché!” moments.(As
mentioned in my posts of last September, Puerto Rican practitioners of
Espiritismo, Santeria, and brujeria bang on tables, ring bells, and shout
“Aché!” whenever an interesting synchronicity manifests, as a way of thanking
the Spirit World for the confirmaciones.(I think that the Aché may come from the Yoruba Ashé, which is an
expression of spiritual force.)

If you happen to get a teacher card which corresponds to one
of your special signs or planets, (such as your sun sign, moon sign, ascendant,
and their planetary rulers), that says something about a teacher who can also
help you learn to be yourself, by exemplifying traits that you may have
suppressed in the process of trying to accommodate the rest of the world.If you can identify people who exemplify the
qualities of your planet or sign, notice what sort of knowledge they have to
share, as well as their teaching styles.

Also, if you are into astrology, you could take a look at
what’s going on with the planet or sign in question.In the case of The Hierophant as portrayed in
the Wizards Tarot, in addition to seeing if anything interesting is transiting
through or aspecting your Taurus house, you could also look at the activities
of the planetoid Chiron.Since the
discovery of Chiron, some astrologers have come to see Chiron as ruler or
co-ruler of Virgo because of his detail-oriented approach to healing and
problem solving, though some argue in favor of Sagittarius, as it is the sign
of the Centaur.Because expansive tarot
archetypes like The Hierophant cannot be confined to one planet or sign as
delimited by any single imposed system such as the G.D., you might think of
what other astrological qualities this card suggests.For example, we can see that the Hierophant
has Jupiter/Sagittarius/9th House qualities in his concern with the
cultivation of the Higher Mind, as well as his dedication to transmitting a
Grand Vision of cosmic harmony, achieved through religious and philosophical
systems and institutions that uphold an idealized social structure.

Getting back to the other cards in the example reading, the
Magician was the flanking card to the right, which suggests this person’s
learning experience is likely to involve finding practical ways to apply the
lessons of the Hierophant, because the Magician is concerned with manifesting
change in the material world—especially in ways that actively and consciously
engage the elemental qualities of Fire, Earth, Air, and Water.The left flanking card was the Four of
Pentacles, which is the most materially oriented of all the cards in the deck,
what with the Pentacles representing the Earth element and the Fours
representing solid structures and foundations.Taken together, all of these cards point to a year of learning
experiences in which she gets to work with a variety of materials and see
practical results, which also jives with a Taurean concern for the material
quality of daily life.

Because these cards add up to Ten, (4 + 5 + 1 = 10), her
Hidden Teacher card is The Wheel of Fortune, which, in the Wizards Deck, is
personified as the school counselor.This would suggest that the lessons she gets out of this semester in The
School of Life will put her in a position to counsel others, which also
suggests that people who have need of the sort of knowledge that she has to
share will be attracted into her life, and may especially need help in taking
their lives in new directions.When the
student is ready, the teacher comes; when the teacher is ready, the student
comes.

Thursday, September 8, 2011

I continue to think about the work we were doing with the Wizards Tarot and what the Major Arcana cards in their personas as teachers at a magical academy can teach us about the school of life, so I have been reviewing the cards drawn at the workshop last Sunday. (The special techniques we were applying to these cards are outlined in the previous post). Although I have occasionally touched on how the cards can be viewed as personal teachers with teaching personalities, I have not had a chance to give this concept a great deal of thought, so the group practice sessions are learning experiences for me, too. Seeing how different cards come up for people with different situations provides opportunities to make new discoveries about the cards. Then, when I sit down to work on this blog, the writing process also becomes a process of “writing for discovery.”

One participant got the Hierophant as her master teacher, who, in this deck, is personified as Chiron, and serves as the professor of mythology. In classical lore, Chiron was the centaur who was teacher to Aesculapius, (who, under Chiron’s tutelage, became a physician, and then the god of healing), as well as to Heracles, Achilles, Perseus, Theseus, and a number of other heroes. Indeed, Chiron as the Hierophant is a teacher’s teacher. In the “Mandrake Academy,” Chiron serves as professor of mythology, and we can relate this to the Hierophant’s concern with the transmission of lore and tradition.

If you happen to draw this card, you might want to delve into how the subject of mythology can be relevant to modern life by consulting Jean Shinoda Bolen’s books, “Gods in Everyman” and “Goddesses in Everywoman,” because she explains how the archetypal qualities of different Greek gods and goddesses are active in different areas of our lives. Also, Clarissa Pinkola Estes’ book, “Women Who Run with the Wolves” draws on archetypal themes in folk and fairy tales to find meaning in different experiences. These are genuine healing stories, which Estes relates and explains in her wonderfully incantatory style.

The centaur Chiron is sometimes also discussed in line with the archetype of “the wounded healer,” because he was accidentally wounded by Heracles, and, despite all his healing arts, he was not able to cure himself. When I think of a great teaching personality who fits this archetype, I think of Milton H. Erickson, sometimes known as the father of medical hypnosis. Erickson often used story-telling as one of his healing techniques, as do many traditional healers. (In fact, one of my ongoing sideline research projects involves cross referencing the works and techniques of Erickson with those of shamanic and other folk-magic healers from societies throughout the world.) Erickson himself was crippled and in terrible pain from polio and post-polio syndrome, so he had to use all kinds of hypnotic techniques on himself, just to be able to function. Some of the books I have read on this subject include “Uncommon Therapy: The Psychiatric Techniques of Milton H. Erickson, M.D.” by Jay Haley, “My Voice Will Go with You: The Teaching Tales of Milton H. Erickson,” as edited by Sidney Rosen, and “Milton H. Erickson, M.D.: An American Healer,” by Bradford Keeney and Betty Alice Erickson. Many people—not just Erickson’s patients, but his friends, students, and even chance acquaintances—have stories of how Erickson would casually tell them some little anecdote or adage, or make some other passing comment, and it was just what their Unconscious minds needed to hear, because their attitudes would be forever altered (reframed), or in some cases, they were able to shed bad habits on the spot. Unfortunately, Erickson did not believe in psychism or supernatural anything, despite the fact it seems no one has been able to reproduce his successes.

In one of Erickson’s notable cases, he created a character known as “The February Man” to help recast an individual’s memories and reactions to negative experiences; this was as part of a more comprehensive program of therapy to help a patient whose anxieties about parenthood were stemming from a cold and loveless childhood. Erickson hypnotically regressed this woman to different ages of childhood, and introduced himself into her memories as a (fictitious) family friend, who showed up at different times over the years and came to be known as the February Man. In this persona, Erickson sort of walked her through different memories and life events, while helping her to reframe them in a new and more positive light, and derive insights that would enable her to respond more positively to new situations.

I have often thought about how, through creative visualization, one could introduce different tarot figures with the ability to offer different types of guidance into one’s fantasies, and as a way of reframing one’s memories. (In line with this, the King of Cups would make a particularly good February Man.) You could do this using any tarot deck for images to concentrate upon, though the Wizards Tarot lends itself exceptionally well, because of the engaging portrayal of some of these different “professors.” Tarot artists do differ a lot in this respect, as there are some decks where the characters look out of the picture space to meet your gaze, and/or also project distinct personalities. In other decks, the human figures may seem preoccupied and distant. Of course, the portrayals can also differ within any given deck.

OK, now that I’ve written this, I find it necessary to take another look at my Wizards deck--that’s part of that “writing for discovery,” I discover things that come out of the writing as I go along. So, I find that most of the teachers don’t meet the viewer’s gaze, as they are focused on their different subjects of study. (Perhaps it’s an indication of my level of engagement that I imagined it to be otherwise.) All the same, with the idea of a tarot figure as a personal teacher, you can use your imagination as to how that teacher could take you in hand as his or her student. In the case of the Hierophant, in his historical role as the instructor of initiates in the Eleusinian mysteries, he explained and revealed what they needed to know through “things said, things done, and things shown.” So, when imaginatively engaging with tarot figures, whether the Hierophant or any other, think about what teachings they might convey to you through “things said, things done, and things shown.”

To be continued … I will pick up on more of this reading in the next post.

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Part of the fun of working with tarot theme decks that use unconventional imagery is the possibility of engaging those decks in ways that might not work so well with any other tarot deck. So, at this past Sunday’s informal, drop-in workshop, we were working with the Wizards Tarot, which is patterned after a magical academy, to see how we can relate different teaching personalities and learning situations to the magic of living.

To try out one of the exercises we experimented with:

Shuffle the cards while posing the question, “Please show me how to get the most out of this semester’s learning experience in the school of life,” or, more simply, you can recite the old Taoist adage, “When the student is ready, the teacher comes.” When you feel you have shuffled enough, set the deck of cards face up before you and go through it until you come to the first Major Arcana card, which will represent a member of the Mandrake Academy’s teaching staff. This represents a major teaching influence that you can call upon and gain from, and may denote a person or experiential situation. If a person, he or she may be someone you already know, or who is soon to enter your life to bring a valuable lesson. Of course, you can take a proactive approach and seek out persons with strong teaching personalities and knowledge to share.

Also, take note of whichever cards come before and after your teacher card, and treat them as flanking cards in a three-card spread. If your teacher happens to be the first card, treat the card on the bottom of the deck as the one which goes before it. The flanking cards are likely to be Minor Arcana cards featuring scenes of Academy students, and will provide clues as to areas of life significant to your learning experience, or ideas on how to actualize that experience. Sometimes the card on the right may also be a Major Arcana/teacher card, which suggests team teaching, or one teaching influence affecting another.

Because each of the Major Arcana card teachers serve as a professor of some magical subject of study, consider how delving into that subject (or approaching that subject in some new way if it is already something you have been studying), might help you find new meaning in your experiences, (including in relation to the archetypal experiences this card represents in more conventional tarot symbolism). Also, look at material images in the flanking cares to consider whether they represent certain “school supplies” or “learning materials” to utilize. The flanking cards’ elemental associations also say something about the nature of your learning experience: Swords emphasize intellectual energies, Wands creative ideas, Pentacles are for practical hands-on learning, and Cups show the affect on your inner life.

After looking over your three-card spread, you can now turn your attention to your “Hidden Teacher” card. There is a hidden teacher in every learning experience, and that is the teacher that you become by virtue of being able to pass on what you gained out of that experience. In fact, in learning and, in turn, teaching, you become part of a “lineage.” To discover the teaching personality that you are likely to express as a result of this semester in the Magical Academy, add the numbers of the three cards in your reading, and then (if necessary) use magical numerology to reduce that number to a number between one and twenty-one, which will correspond to another Major Arcana card and professor in the Mandrake Academy.

Note that you could also apply these techniques to other tarot decks, and then consider how you would perceive the Major Arcana cards as teachers, and the Minors as learning situations.

With the next post, I will elaborate on some of the tarot teaching personalities.

About Me

I am a scholar of folklore, psychology, medical anthropology, the material culture of magic, ritual studies, history, and literature. My books include Tarot Spells, Tarot Your Everyday Guide (winner of 2001 Coalition of Visionary Resources award for best Self Help book), Tarot for a New Generation (2002 COVR winner, best General Interest Title), and By Candlelight: Rites for Celebration, Blessing and Prayer (2005 COVR runner-up, Spirituality). I continue to work on multiple books, with ongoing research projects exploring the ways folk magic and medicinal techniques can apply to modern problems, including the modulation of Asperger’s Syndrome and other neuro-sensory processing problems.

Pop in for a Spell!

On the first Sunday of every month from April through November, I hold magical chats at the Triple Goddess Bookstore in Okemos, Michigan, where I teach new divination techniques—doing Tarot readings or other types of readings as part of the group demonstration. I may also lead visitors through magical activities involving Tarot and other types of Oracles, walk people through different types of spells to promote health and well-being, present seasonal enchantments, lecture on folk magic, charms, etc., and offer my opinions on anything else that anyone cares to talk about. These sessions are free and casual, so anyone can pop in or out at any time, (between 1 and 3 p.m.). I also occasionally visit other stores in Michigan.

I am a scatter-brained person who has a hard time remembering everything I want to say, so oftentimes I forget to mention things that would enhance peoples’ magical experience, or better clarify their readings or their understanding of the different topics we cover. Therefore, I am using this blog to bring up a few of the thoughts I have for upcoming sessions--then, afterward, I will offer a retrospective to bring up things I'd like to add—providing that my antiquated computer and rural phone lines enable me to get onto the Internet. Also, I will attempt to answer any questions that anyone thinks of afterward—again, providing that I’m able to get onto the Net. I am also open to other suggestions, or activities that people would like to see repeated.